Indian prime minister Narendra Modi at the COP26 summit Alastair Grant/AP/Shutterstock
India has said it will reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2070. This is decades later than many other countries, but it marks the first time the country has put an end date on its contribution to climate change.
The target was announced by prime minister Narendra Modi at the COP26 summit in Glasgow yesterday, amid warnings by world leaders about the dangers of failing to act fast enough on emissions.
鈥淎 year ago no one would have expected India to announce a net-zero target at COP26,鈥 says at the University of Oxford. 鈥淏ut that鈥檚 the nature of tipping points. Once critical mass is reached, it is very hard not to join in.鈥 He says that countries representing 90 per cent of global GDP are now covered by a net-zero target.
Advertisement
However, India鈥檚 2070 date is 20 years later than the 2050 pledged by the UK, US and other high-income countries, and later than the 2060 chosen by China, Russia and Saudi Arabia.
鈥淭he date is late, but more important is that聽India聽committed to zero at all, which was thought to be unlikely by many,鈥 says at the New Climate Institute, a German non-profit organisation. The long-term commitment will also shape investments today, he adds.
With a population of 1.38 billion and growing, India is the world鈥檚 fourth biggest emitter after China, the US and the European Union. But it has some of the lowest per capita CO2 emissions, at 1.9 tonnes per person in 2019, compared with 5.5 tonnes in the UK and 16 tonnes in the US, a point Modi has repeatedly emphasised in the past.
The new goal wouldn’t see the world keep to the Paris Agreement鈥檚 aim of keeping temperature rises to 1.5掳C above pre-industrial levels, . Hale says that it is largely the fault of richer countries, which used much of the world鈥檚 鈥渃arbon budget鈥, leaving little room for countries like India to grow their economies.
Modi also declared four other steps, including 50 per cent of India鈥檚 energy being sourced from renewable sources by 2030. Although he used the word 鈥渆nergy鈥, the target is very likely to cover only electricity, as such a goal for energy would be nigh-impossible for India.
The country鈥檚 renewable energy capacity should reach 500 gigawatts by 2030, up from around 134GW today, and it is also aiming to cut its projected CO2 emissions by a billion tonnes between now and 2030 and cut its carbon intensity 鈥 emissions released for each unit of GDP 鈥 by 45 per cent.
Modi said yesterday that while the world had focused on cutting emissions, it hadn’t paid enough attention to adapting to a warming world. 鈥淭his is an injustice to those countries more impacted by climate change,鈥 he said.
India鈥檚 2070 pledge means that all major emitters have now declared a net-zero deadline, effectively putting a backstop on when the world will stop burning fossil fuels. Last week, China, the world鈥檚 biggest polluter, formalised its 2060 goal in a plan submitted to the United Nations. The blueprint also committed to peaking emissions before 2030.
The COP26 summit was opened by UK prime minister Boris Johnson likening the situation for world leaders faced with climate change to being James Bond strapped to a ticking doomsday device. He said the meeting in Glasgow could become the moment humanity began to 鈥渄efuse that bomb鈥.
Broadcaster and naturalist David Attenborough gave an emotional speech, urging leaders to stabilise atmospheric CO2 concentrations and to turn 鈥渢ragedy into triumph鈥. He added: “Our motivation should not be fear, but hope.鈥 UN secretary general Antonio Guterres issued a bald warning that: 鈥淲e are digging our own graves.鈥 Meanwhile, US president Joe Biden apologised for the US pulling out of the Paris Agreement under Donald Trump.
One of the most striking speeches of the day came from Mia Amor Mottley, prime minister of Barbados. “1.5掳C is what we need to survive. 2掳C is a death sentence for the people of Barbuda and Antigua,鈥 she said, referring to one of the island nation鈥檚 Caribbean neighbours. “Can we find it within ourselves to bring Glasgow back on track or do we leave today believing it was a failure before it starts?”
Sign up for Today at COP26, our free daily newsletter covering the crucial climate summit
Topics:



